LEXINGTON, Ky. — Vander Blue scored 19 second-half points to rally third-seeded Marquette out of another hole, and the Golden Eagles survived No. 6 Butler 74-72 on Saturday to reach the round of 16 in the NCAA tournament.

Like November's first meeting between the teams at the Maui Invitational, won 72-71 by Butler on Rotnei Clarke's buzzer-beating 3-pointer, this was a back-and-forth, high-intensity affair that came down to the final shot.

Only this time, Butler missed.

Marquette (25-8) will meet the winner of Sunday's game between Illinois and Miami (Fla.) on Thursday in the East Regional semifinals at Washington, D.C.

Clarke's 24 points led Butler (28-9).

Blue, the junior whose last-second layup edged Davidson on Thursday, led the Golden Eagles' rally from a 35-27 halftime deficit and tied the game at 69 on 3-pointer with 1:25 remaining.

That set the stage for more late-game drama by his teammates.

After Jamil Wilson's two free throws made it 71-69, Davante Gardner deflected Clarke's pass intended for Kellen Dunham underneath and then made the first of three late free throws for 74-70 lead with 4.7 seconds left.

After Wilson's goaltend on what would have been a layup by Andrew Smith cut the lead to two 2 seconds later, Blue almost became the goat by throwing away the inbounds pass intended for Wilson with 2.9 seconds left.

The Bulldogs, who seem to win every close game at this time of year, couldn't get a good last look. Smith took an off-balance 3 from up top that was way off, slamming into the backboard and setting off another Marquette celebration.

Coach Brad Stevens' Bulldogs, who reached the championship game in 2010 and '11, won't make the second weekend this year.

Blue finished with 29 points.

He shot 9 of 15 from the field with three from long range, finishing just four points off his career high. Trent Lockett and Wilson each added 13 points for Marquette, which shot 23 of 54 (43 percent) and was 5 of 12 from beyond the arc.

The Bulldogs' defense also held Clarke to just six second-half points after he seemed ready to dominate the game by himself. Smith finished with 17 points.

The outcome ended up as another example of Blue's leadership and clutch play, but until then it deemed destined to be decided by the last team with the ball.

Both teams have come a long way since that early-season thriller, and both got here with by coming from behind in their first games. Butler's 68-56 win over Bucknell was easier, in which the Bulldogs overcame a 37-31 deficit by outscoring the Bison 37-19 over the final 10 minutes. There was plenty of room for improvement, such as 35 percent shooting and allowing Bucknell to take the lead with a 19-2 run.

Marquette fell in a nine-point hole against Davidson that necessitated the last-minute rally led by Blue, who scored the game-winning layup with a second left for one of the more thrilling early-round finishes.

Dictating the tempo on both ends was the Golden Eagles' main objective, especially creating shots inside the arc.

Both teams succeeded to an extent in a fast-paced first 10 minutes, with Marquette moving the ball around to get the two-point baskets it thrives on. The movement worked so well for the Golden Eagles that Wilson — Thursday's other hero — and Lockett were open for 3-pointers, and made them.

Butler hit 3 of 17 from 3 against Bucknell, but they found their range against Marquette. Clarke made three of Butler's seven 3-pointers in the first half.

Long shots came in handy since the Bulldogs struggled from elsewhere. They were 4 of 16 on 2-pointers.

Butler was still better than Marquette (7 of 27), which finished the first half frustrated by the Bulldogs' defense that contested everything near the basket. During one 40-second sequence before the break the Golden Eagles missed five straight shots including one from outside, sending them to the locker room trailing 35-27.

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